Friday, June 29, 2012

Is LinkedIn a joke? Wondering why your LinkedIn profile is not helping you find jobs, friends and fun? Upset that the site might be just a waste of time?

Don't go there. LinkedIn is one of the most powerful ways to find a job today, but if you're not playing the game a certain way you're not going to win.

Using LinkedIn, I've been fortunate in that I've been approached by several recruiters for job opportunities, propositioned by entrepreneurs for social media advice, and generally had a great time meeting people around the world. My blog traffic has also gone through the roof.

Most questions I get about LinkedIn are how to use profile pages, so today I'm going to give some tips to help your pages start making some serious noise. Buckle up!

1. Optimize your
profile caption

You will notice that
throughout the site, there is a caption about what you do next to your name.
This caption is extremely important, as it's one of the most important ways
recruiters find potential employees. Lets help them find you!

What I want you to do
is go to the "More" tab at the top of the LinkedIn home page and
click on "Skills & Expertise". You will see a screen where you
can enter skills. Put in the kind of skills that you have, and also try
entering skills for the kind of job you are looking for. You will get a
description. Use parts of the description in your profile caption, as well as
in your summary. Think of it almost like an objective statement:

You should see an
increase in people who view your profile if you have optimized your caption
properly.

Under the summary
section of your profile there is a section called “Specialties”. Fill it with
skills that you found in the "Skills & Expertise" section
mentioned above. Of course you should only mention skills that you
actually have. This will help you be found by the LinkedIn search engine.

You also have a
"Skills & Expertise" section on your profile. You should try to
populate it with as many skills you have as possible. This also will help you
be found by the search engine.

2. Make your profile more
about your career arc and less about your employers

What we want to do is
market you and your skills, not your company. In your LinkedIn profile, keep
company descriptions but explain how you fit in and made the company a better
place. What are your accomplishments, what are you proud of? For example, if you
came in as an intern and were hired, that is a big deal!

3. Use numbers to highlight your career

If you can say you managed X number of people or generated X
revenue for your company, I would move this kind of quantifiable info to the
top of all job descriptions. Numbers help give recruiters and HR people a better
sense of your career arc.

Pick no more than five and no less than three
bullets to describe each of the jobs you've had. It's ok to not list
everything, that's what the interviews are for. Of course, if you have amazing experience, feel free to use more bullets, but be careful to not go overboard!

5. Go back to school

Go find the summaries of the different programs
you've studied at. Insert them on your profile page. You might think that
everyone knows what you studied, but the fact is that they don’t. Schools and universities
are different; they do not all have the same focus.

As always, if you can
use keywords from the "Skills & Expertise" section, do so.

6. Get as many
recommendations on your LinkedIn page as possible

Recommendations really help
open doors, and there is no such thing as too many. If you feel shy about this
(I've heard this from many people!), tell trusted classmates you've studied
with that you need the recommendations for professional purposes and that you'd
be honored if they would write something. You just make clear that in exchange
you would do the same for them in turn. If they accept, great. If they say it’s
ok, do it anyway. Recommendations are very valuable.

Your references might
ask you what to say. If they do, give them some things from the Skills &
Expertise section to talk about.

Here is how to ask for
recommendations. Go to the recommendations link on the upper right side of your
profile page:

You will see a new
screen. Select the position that you want to be recommended for, choose the
people you want to recommend you, and then write a personalized message that
recalls your relationship and how the recommendation will help you. Here is a
made up example:

7. Choose a profile photo

Some
people decide not to use a photo with their LinkedIn profile. This is usually
ill advised. It’s important to put a face to your talents. Use a photo that
would help you fit in whatever setting you want to work in. If you are in a
very corporate environment, then your clothing should reflect that. On the
other hand, if the work place has a more relaxed dress code, than feel free to
look the part.

8.
Tell a story with your
profile

Not sure if it's
acceptable in the companies you are targeting to tell a story with your
summary, but all facts that help people remember you as an individual are very
valuable. Stories accomplish this best. For example, an interest in sports
shows that you are not just a behind-the-desk person, but a disciplined,
dedicated individual who loves healthy competition. If you tell a personal
story, write the summary in the third person so as to not sound vain. On the
other hand, if telling a story is not acceptable, just stick to the facts about
your career, but then speak in the first person so that you sound like a
person, not a robot.

9. Use status updates that could be useful to others

By all mean, update your status with links and ideas that highlight your interests, but try to use information that is useful to others. If you have blog posts, mention them. If you see articles you like related to your career path, mention them. Try to make your profile page a hub for interesting ideas and original content. Your contacts will thank you for it and be more likely to spread the word, netting your profile page more views. When this happens, you will likely begin getting invitations to connect on LinkedIn.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

You’re engaged in a deep conversation with others online about
something important, when BAM!

You’ve just been targeted by a troll, that scaly, lecherous
upsetter of do-gooder netizens that just wants to see the world burn.

Is there anything that you can do to counter trolls? Yes, but it all begins with an
understanding of human psychology, not social media tools.

What I’m about to
share with you is valuable information that I learned at Northwestern University. This
advice works with real world businesses, as well as online.

Not every troll should be treated the same way. Some trolls
seek to upset conversations because they are frustrated because of some related
negative past experience. There are trolls just looking to derail a
conversation for the purpose of inflating their own egos. Other trolls are
seeking to embarrass or disrupt online discourse for political or business
reasons. And some trolls are just jerks. Sad but true.

Whether you are an individual or a business, dealing with
the four types of trolls mentioned above requires patience and a
tactically-sound approach. I’ll show how it’s done, but first, if you want a good
overview of trolling, watch this:

Unhappy trolls

Unhappy trolls bitter about the past are usually upset
because of a vicariously negative experience; they are angry because they feel they
have been burned.

For example, the individual who excitedly buys a new car,
only to find it breaks down repeatedly in front of friends and family. This
person is never going to buy from that car manufacturer again, and he or she is
going to make sure that everyone continuously shows sympathy. You know tat this person
is a troll and not just an unhappy customer with reasonable concerns by the
lengths they go to whine, whinge and make sure everyone nearby feels equally
outraged.

The unhappy troll is a disgruntled type that is usually just having a
bad day or week, not trying to be especially malicious or a pain in you know what. Usually unhappy trolls simply need to have their bad
experience recognized. Regardless of their demeanor, the upset troll needs to
be addressed as a respected individual. After they have been calmly addressed,
which sets the tone for the conversation, the troll’s negative experience
should be heard out. Finally, the individual should be smoothly offered an
option that they will probably reject. When the option is rejected, that should
be followed quickly by a counter option that is more palatable to both sides.

Luckily, people are more like to be accepting of negotiation
if they feel that the other side is willing to do the same. However, this
process needs to be handled very carefully so that the first offer does not
appear as a rip-off. Community managers should stockpile offers and
counter-offers for different situations. If trolls still continue to whine,

Egotistical trolls

Some trolls are just looking to inflate their egos. The best
example that I can think of is the argumentative person who has no good
reason for what they say, except that they are saying it. Such trolls are often loud and rude, or use forceful language not backed by facts. The whole intent behind this
approach is to paint themselves as intelligent while the opposition as flawed. If
they were simply attention-seeking and not trolls, they would not try to tear
others down.

There are two approaches to this type of troll. The approach that you choose depends on how intelligent the troll’s argument appears to
onlookers.

In the first approach, the troll’s argument is not very
intelligent. All that you have to do to poke holes in the argument is to make clear that you are more skilled/knowledgeable/cooler than the troll, and that you have a different opinion than the troll. A classic example of this approach is Senator Lloyd Bentson
shooting down Senator Dan Quayle’s assertion of being as skilled as John F.
Kennedy.

Quayle wasn't exactly being a troll here, but you get the point:

In the second approach, the troll might appear a good deal
more intelligent or qualified, usually more because of their position than
because they offer a strong argument. In this case, the troll’s argument should
be addressed directly. The troll should not be attacked on a personal level,
but rather his or her points must be dismantled and/or shown as insulting to
listeners. We must expose the troll’s knowledge as inferior to our understanding.

This week, Mark Cuban, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks,
debated ESPN’s Skip Bayless on whether or not LeBron James of the Miami Heat deserved to be criticized for how he played Dallas. Skip has been criticized by his co-host Stephen A. Smith for being over the top in how he characterizes LeBron.

I'm not a LeBron James fan, but by most accounts I’ve seen online Mark completely demolished Skip. I have to agree. Here’s the video:

Political trolls

Trolls that are motivated by political or business reasons
can be very dangerous and difficult to deal with. The reason for this is that
they are driven by their intellects more so than their egos. They can be
calculating, conniving, and extremely motivated. Understanding their thinking
and exposing it as incorrect can very often draw them out into confrontational
positions that are far easier to debunk.

Dealing with such individuals requires a very nuanced and
careful approach to first re-frame the conversation and then prove the troll
wrong. One of the best ways to defeat a political troll is to expose their
bias. We do this by showing that the troll has different standards depending on
whether it supports their point of view. By the time this is done, the debate
is usually over regardless of what the troll tries to say or do, and the debate
is over.

Jesse Lange, a high school student, debated Bill O’Reilley,
the abrasive conservative commentator on FOX, showing how it’s done. The same
tactics used by Jesse can be used by conservatives against liberals as well:

Trolls that are sociopathic jerks

Trolls that are jerks are some of the hardest people to deal
with. They want attention and have strong sociopathic tendencies and just want
to hurt others. At times their behavior goes beyond simply mean to outright
illegal.

Wonder what such a troll looks like? The BBC tracked one
down and asked him his motivations:

Not a very pleasant guy, is he.

Short of getting the police involved, there are only a few
different approaches to dealing with trolls that are jerks. Deleting posts and
banning trolls should be strongly considered. If posts that are offensive are allowed
to stay up, they can poison the whole atmosphere of the forum. This is why many
forums either ban posts that violate user rules, or allow other users to vote
down offensive comments so that they are hidden.

If trolls cannot be banned for some reason, then they should
be ignored. Since they are not getting the attention they crave, they often
give up and go away.

Trolls fear humor

Finally, if you’re up to it, humor can humiliate trolls or
at least make them look ridiculous. As a last resort, use humor to defuse tension. Take the trolls views and adopt them as your own!

Al Franken owns Ann Coulter during a debate
on which person they would most like to be:

Stephen Colbert takes humor to an even higher level by
appearing to agree with Bill O’Reilley. Stephen’s reason for doing this was to
show how unreasonable Bill is:

You know that when you get a troll to laugh that you’ve done a
good job. Aside from The Joker anyways.

What experiences have you had with trolls? How have you defeated them? Do you think there is anything missing from this guide or anything that could be improved? I'm looking forward to your comments!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Let me help. I just started using my Twitter account seriously a few months ago, and I've been seeing explosive engagement! I'm fortunate to have met a lot of cool people, as well as learned a lot in the process.

Here are 4 quick and dirty tips to get a lot out of Twitter quickly:

1. Choose your retweets wisely

Post a blend of content: 30% should be retweets of posts (make sure you know what the posts say, and that you agree with them. RTs are a public part of your personal brand!)

2. Don't be a robot

Your tweets should be 30% direct conversations and comments with other people. This shows you're not robo-tweeting. I know, I know, 30% is high, but you're more likely to connect with people initially if you do this. Try to only follow people who connect with you personally.

3. Don't a be a nerd either

40% of your posts should be original comments and links to original stuff you've made, on a blog for example. Try to have a main focus to show you're driven, and some other side interests to show that you're not a nerd.

4. Be an icon

Tons of people have their photo for their personal profile. How many do you know have a personal icon? In my opinion, icons stand out better and get you noticed when your picture might be lost. It also shows you have special initiative.

You can always tweak the above advice depending on how many followers you have and your goals, but these tips will help you quickly stand out from the competition.

I'm at twitter.com/aatifbokhari. I'm open to all follows, but I only follow back people who directly engage with me.

Do you agree with the above tips, or do you have different strategies? What do you think DOESN'T work? Sound off in the comments below!

About Me

How many people do you know who launched their own media organization?
Aatif Bokhari is one.
Aatif has been writing professionally since he was 17. Formerly a communications consultant and award-winning journalist, he went on to join Ford Motor Company's agency of choice, Team Detroit. He managed many of Ford's social media pages while in Dearborn. He holds multiple degrees, including an MS in corporate communications from Northwestern University, and an MA in Near Eastern Literature from Wayne State University. Visit Aatif's LinkedIn page for more info (www.linkedin.com/in/aatifbokhari).